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marshland storks –
this year too paths emerge
along the Schmutter
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: local season

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marshland storks –
this year too paths emerge
along the Schmutter
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: local season

Aubrie Cox’s PDF collection of poetry on the theme of Fox Dreams is now ready and up on her blog, yaywords, to be downloaded, shared and above all, enjoyed.
My own poem is on page 10, together with a number of really great haiku. To read them all, click here
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stealing away
from my yard again, little fox!
first blossoms
.
.
earth day —
the darkness inside
leaf veins
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: earth day
Can be found on Gabi Greve’s World Kigo Database, under Earth Day (2012)
I am pleased to report here that Cara Holman, in her blog Prose Posies, celebrated April the 17th, National Haiku Poetry Day, by hosting a virtual haiku poetry reading event. Several poets, including myself, were given the space to ‘read’ their haiku at this event.
Thank you, Cara, for organizing this wonderful space, and for including my haiku. In such good company!
The link, which makes the poetry reading accessible to those interested is here
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light rain –
I leave the cherry blossom
to the birds
.
NaHaiWriMo promt: observation (3)
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moonless night
a pair of gumboots
inside the door
.
In Gabi Greve’s World Kigo Database: Gumboots, Saijiki for Kenya and Tropical Regions, here (scroll down)
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spring sky
on my screen
tag clouds
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: observation
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spring night
the lit spire across
the valley
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: description/observation
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searching your face
for my childhood friend
Welsh onion heads
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: cool/warm spring
For ‘Welsh onion head’ see Gabi Greve‘s World Kigo Database here
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after the picnic
and the drive home
cool air
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: cool, autumn
Happy National Haiku Poetry Month, everyone!
Tomorrow, April 17, is National Haiku Poetry Day, a day dedicated to celebrating haiku – locally in the United States and globally in the hearts of all those loving this genre. The Haiku Foundation has organized a number of events all around the country. You can see the schedule of events here
If you live outside the US, there’s still lots to do. Explore the website of the Foundation, taste the Per Diem: Daily Haiku straight from its box, write haiku, spread the word…
Whatever you do, Happy National Haiku Poetry Day!
National Poetry Month 2012 – Update. Taking part in Couplets, the multi-author poetry blog organized by Joanne Merriam of Upper Rubber Boot Books, I was honoured to be featured:
On the 1st of April 2012 at Margaret Dornaus’ wonderful blog ‘haiku-doodle’
On the 6th of April 2012, at Angie Werren’s great blog for micropoetry ‘feathers’
In the same project, Couplets, 1st of April, I hosted the exquisite poetry of Margaret Dornaus on my own blog. Margaret offered three of her excellent tanka poems.
I also had the pleasure of hosting Lisa Cihlar, whose poetry I love. Lisa wrote a fascinating article about the creation of one of her characters, ‘Swampy Woman.’
There is more to come in the second half of the month. And there are so many good poets taking part in this project! Visit the Couplets site and enjoy! And don’t forget to come back!
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toll house
the groundless optimism
of daisies
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: tax
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shimmering heat –
pine-scented water
over glowing stones
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: shimmering heat
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no longer entire-
his shrinking world
.
Micropoem on the NaHaiWriMo prompt: cats
My kitten Emile’s operation is coming up soon and this is also about taking his point of view, in advance…
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rest-home yard
a garden swing
creaks
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: swing
.
spring tide
flocks of waders rise
and fall
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: water/earth/spring
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Easter light
a seed
splits open
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: religious observance
.
the stillness between
this day and the next-
paschal lily
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: religious observance
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April full moon –
instead of herself
her shadow
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: moon +
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air traffic –
giving the kites room
to manoeuvre
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: Spring kigo, human activities
.
.
.
.
Good news! Snapshot Press has announced the results of The Haiku Calendar Contest 2012, selecting the entries for next year 2013. I am very pleased that one of my haiku, ‘winter wind,’ written in response to a NaHaiWriMo prompt, has made it as a runner-up and will be included in the Calendar! The complete results can be seen here
About the Haiku Calendar (I quote from their site):
“The Haiku Calendar has appeared annually since the 2000 edition was published in 1999. Edited by John Barlow, and featuring haiku poets from around the world, the calendar continues a rich tradition exploring and celebrating the relevance of seasonal references in English-language haiku.”
Of course, this proves the point: my daily haiku training at NaHaiWriMo is doing me good!
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hawthorn blossom –
the thorny issues no longer
matter
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: blossom
April rain –
this year too the water butt
half full
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: rain
Well, April, the cruelest month, is upon us! Thank God we have poetry to help us survive it. Poetry, Poetry, Poetry, Poetry!
The Haiku Foundation, the Poetry Foundation, Poets.org, brim with wonderful poetry to feed the soul – and the senses! Visit them and forget about April; or at least enjoy it! There is also Per Diem, the Daily haiku offered by The Haiku Foundation on their home page (bottom right-hand corner); Couplets, the multi-author poetry blog, coordinated by Joanne Merriam of Upper Rubber Boot Books, the Facebook pages of NaHaiWriMo, and numerous other projects, workshops, readings, and poetry-related events.
On this first day of Poetry Month, I am very happy to host Margaret Dornaus, ‘writer, a teacher, wife, traveler . . . as well as a haiku-doodler.’ Margaret says about herself, ‘I live in a beautiful woodland setting, surrounded by native oak forests, that inspires me to record haiku snapshots of luna moths and our resident roadrunner, and even an occasional black bear as it hightails it across the top of my road, my mongrel dog barking at its heels as I watch with wonder’.
In her post hosted here, Margaret kindly states, ‘I’m thrilled to exchange places with Stella for the day in observance of National Poetry Month and to have her wonderful work featured on my blog, Haiku-doodle (http://www.haikudoodle.wordpress.com).
Margaret herself chose to offer three poems (see below). This is how she reflects on her offering:
‘After we decided to share three of our poems on each other’s site, I contemplated whether I should contribute haiku or tanka. I began writing both about a year and a half ago, and, although I was already familiar with haiku, I knew nothing about tanka until I accidentally stumbled upon a call for submissions to Pamela A. Babusci’s journal Moonbathing. When I started studying this ancient lyrical form and reading the work of other tanka poets, I knew I’d found a home . . . . And so I’ve chosen three tanka to feature here today.’
you remind me
how it felt that night we met . . .
our universe
filled with possibilities
and the soft hum of tree frogs
.
Simply Haiku, vol. 9, no. 1, Spring 2011
.
years from now
I promise to remember
how you looked that night
alone on the verandah
holding moonlight in your hands
.
First place, Tanka Society of America
2011 International Tanka Contest
.
in darkness
we forget our anger . . .
suddenly
the sound of wild geese
piercing the starless night
.
Ribbons: Tanka Society of America Journal,
vol. 7, no. 1, Spring 2011
.
This blog post exchange is part of the Couplets project, a multi-author poetry blog tour coordinated by Joanne Merriam of Upper Rubber Boot Books “to help promote poetry and poets for National Poetry Month“.
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running scared –
April fool catches
his shadow
.
NaHaiWriMo Prompt: April fools
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rice paper –
how often do I eat
my words
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: writing
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growing old –
I get to know the back
of my eye
‘
NaHaiWriMo prompt: growing